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The Bures Band Deliver a Four-Song Live Statement in the KEXP Studio

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The Bures Band walked into the KEXP studio and made it count. The five-piece ran through four tracks, “Avon Valley,” “Ozonia,” “Birds Nest,” and “The Pilot,” a focused, unhurried set that lets the band’s three-guitar dynamic breathe and build across 25 minutes of live performance.

Foo Fighters Bring Stadium Rock Behind the Desk for a First-Ever NPR Tiny Desk Concert

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Foo Fighters have spent the better part of 30 years filling arenas, but their first-ever NPR Tiny Desk Concert proves the songs work just as well at close range. The band opened with “Spit Shine” from their latest album ‘Your Favorite Toy’, moved through “Learn to Fly” from 1999’s ‘There Is Nothing Left to Lose’, pulled back for the introspective “Child Actor”, and closed the set with “My Hero” and “Everlong”, both from 1997’s ‘The Colour and the Shape’. Dave Grohl summed up the band’s approach simply: “If you put instruments in our hands and there are people, it’s fun to play.”

SPIN Magazine Expands Into Canada With Michael Hollett Leading the Charge as Editor-in-Chief

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SPIN Magazine is coming to Canada. The iconic music media brand, a fixture of American music culture for more than 4 decades, announces a dedicated Canadian editorial presence built around local artists, culture, and live music.

Leading the expansion is Michael Hollett, veteran Canadian media executive and NXNE founder, named editor-in-chief of SPIN Canada. Hollett brings decades of experience championing Canadian music to a platform with genuine global reach. “I’ve spent decades in journalism championing Canadian artists and musicians,” he says, “and finding fresh new voices to tell these stories in SPIN will be incredibly satisfying.”

SPIN Canada launches June 10-14 with the debut of the SPIN Canada Stage at NXNE, timed to FIFA World Cup programming week in Toronto. The festival brings together more than 350 artists and offers SPIN an immediate, high-profile platform to spotlight emerging and established Canadian talent right out of the gate.

While SPIN’s U.S. edition already reaches Canadian readers, this is something different. SPIN Canada builds a localized editorial operation dedicated entirely to Canadian artists, audiences, and cultural coverage, with original reporting, artist features, and cultural pieces tailored to the market, while plugging local talent into SPIN’s broader global network.

SPIN CEO Jimmy Hutcheson frames the expansion as a natural extension of the brand’s momentum. “From our recent 40th anniversary celebration during Art Basel in Miami, featuring Chance the Rapper and Clipse, to collaborations with brands like Urban Outfitters and Aviator Nation, the demand for SPIN continues to grow in new and unexpected ways,” he says. “Canada is a natural next step.”

The launch also builds on SPIN’s recent acquisition of Live For Live Music, which deepened the company’s footprint in live events and community-driven programming. SPIN Canada follows that same path, with live events in Canada already part of the longer-term plan.

Mo Ghoneim, president of Billboard U.K. and Billboard Canada/AMG, sees the timing as ideal. “SPIN has such a strong legacy in music journalism and culture,” he says, “and we see this as an exciting opportunity to help spotlight emerging artists, especially through a festival platform that brings together music fans from around the world.”

SPIN Canada is a significant moment for Canadian music media. The country has never lacked for talent. Now it has a publication with the muscle to match.

Jack Douglas, The Producer Behind ‘Toys in the Attic,’ ‘Double Fantasy,’ and ‘Live at Budokan,’ Dead at 80

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Jack Douglas built some of the most important rock records ever made. He did it from the bottom up, starting as a janitor at the Record Plant in Manhattan and rising to become one of the most trusted producers in the business. Douglas died on May 11, 2026, from complications from lymphoma. He was 80.

His family said it plainly: “He lived an incredible life and was an amazing storyteller. He was very, very funny and goofy and loved to tell jokes. He loved what he did, and he worked til the very end. We will miss him a lot.”

The resume is staggering. Douglas engineered John Lennon’s ‘Imagine’ in 1971, the beginning of a deep personal and professional bond with the former Beatle. That relationship culminated in 1980 with ‘Double Fantasy’, the Lennon and Yoko Ono album that won the Grammy Award for Album of the Year. Lennon was killed in December of that year, just weeks after the album’s release. Douglas later worked on the posthumous ‘Milk and Honey’, assembled from the same sessions.

He was also present for the Who’s Lifehouse sessions at the Record Plant in 1971, recordings that were eventually reshaped into ‘Who’s Next’, one of the defining rock albums of the decade. His engineering credit on that record alone would be enough for most careers. Douglas was just getting started.

His work with Aerosmith across the 1970s remains his most commercially thunderous contribution to rock. He co-produced ‘Get Your Wings’ in 1974, then took full control for ‘Toys in the Attic’ in 1975. That album went nine times platinum and delivered “Sweet Emotion” and “Walk This Way” to the world. The story behind the latter is pure Douglas: he’d just seen Mel Brooks’ Young Frankenstein with the band and was goofing around recreating a bit from the film. Steven Tyler caught the energy and built the lyric from there.

‘Rocks’ followed in 1976 and ‘Draw the Line’ in 1977. Both have since been certified multi-platinum. Both appear on Rolling Stone’s 500 Greatest Albums of All Time list. The band considered Douglas so integral to their sound that they called him the sixth member of Aerosmith. He even co-wrote their 1978 track “Kings and Queens.” After a brief separation, he returned for ‘Rock in a Hard Place’ in 1982, then again for the blues covers collection ‘Honkin’ on Bobo’ in 2004 and the band’s final album of originals, ‘Music from Another Dimension!’ in 2012, on which he provided the narration on the opening track “LUV XXX.”

The Cheap Trick relationship was equally deep and equally productive. Douglas helmed their self-titled 1977 debut, then the live record that became a genuine phenomenon, ‘Live at Budokan’ in 1978, and its companion ‘Budokan II’. He later produced ‘Found All the Parts’ in 1980, ‘Standing on the Edge’ in 1985, ‘Special One’ in 2003, and ‘Rockford’ in 2006. When Cheap Trick were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2016, they said directly from the stage that they were “forever indebted” to Douglas.

The Patti Smith Group’s ‘Radio Ethiopia’ in 1976 is another standout, a raw and confrontational record that Douglas captured without blunting its edges. He also contributed to the New York Dolls’ self-titled debut, the album that inspired producer Bob Ezrin to encourage Douglas to step up and start producing himself. That nudge changed rock history.

Beyond those landmarks, Douglas worked with Lou Reed on ‘Berlin’, co-produced sessions with Bob Dylan and Allen Ginsberg, and brought his engineering skills to records by Miles Davis, Alice Cooper, Montrose, Mountain, Blue Öyster Cult, Starz, and Graham Parker. Later credits include albums by Supertramp, Zebra, Slash’s Snake Pit, Local H, and Clutch.

Douglas was born in the Bronx on November 6, 1945. He started out as a folk musician, wrote songs for Robert F. Kennedy’s 1964 senatorial campaign, then chased music to England before returning to New York and enrolling at the Institute of Audio Research. He was part of its first graduating class. The Record Plant hired him to sweep floors. Within months, he was behind the boards.

His introduction to Lennon became the stuff of legend. While editing tapes at the Record Plant ahead of a session, Lennon walked in. Douglas told him about his time in Liverpool, and Lennon realized he was one of the “Crazy Yanks” he’d read about in the papers. “He got really excited to meet me,” Douglas recalled in a 2012 interview. “He invited me into the tracking rooms, he gave me a ride home in his limo. Pretty soon, I was working on the record as an assistant. We became friends.”

That friendship produced some of the most emotionally significant recordings in rock. Douglas remembered the mood of the ‘Double Fantasy’ sessions with clarity and warmth. “Having been with John in L.A. during that time when he was just unbelievably depressed,” he told Rolling Stone in 1981, “the one thing that makes me feel not so bad now is that when he died he was real happy, maybe happier than he’s ever been.”

Jack Douglas worked until the end. Fifty-five years in the business, dozens of landmark records, and a reputation built entirely on sound and trust. Rock and roll lost one of its great architects on Monday night.

The Tragically Hip Immortalize Their Final Tour With Landmark Live Album and CBC Rebroadcast

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Ten years ago, one third of Canada stopped what they were doing to watch The Tragically Hip play their final show. That night didn’t fade. It became part of the country. Now the band is marking the decade with a live album and a nationwide rebroadcast that will bring it all back.

‘Live July 22 – August 20, 2016’ arrives August 21, 2026, via Universal Music Canada. Drawn from the band’s 15-date, coast-to-coast Man Machine Poem Tour, the collection spans arenas from Winnipeg to Hamilton to Kingston, capturing the full emotional arc of a farewell that felt like a national event because it was one. Listen to “Fifty-Mission Cap” and “Locked In The Trunk Of A Car” and Pre-order The Tragically Hip: Live July 22 – August 20, 2016 here.

The album is mixed and mastered in Dolby Atmos by longtime Hip audio engineer Mark Vreeken. The sonic presentation is immersive and detailed, doing full justice to performances that already carried enormous weight in the room. Two tracks are out now: “Fifty-Mission Cap,” recorded in Edmonton, and “Locked In The Trunk Of A Car” from the final Kingston night.

The Kingston finale itself gets its own moment. On Saturday, August 22, 2026, CBC rebroadcasts A National Celebration commercial-free at 7 p.m. local time on CBC TV, CBC Gem, and both CBC Radio services. The concert streams globally on CBC Music’s YouTube channel and throughout North America on SiriusXM on CBC Radio One (ch. 169) and Canada Talks (ch. 167). Simultaneously, ‘Live July 22 – August 20, 2016’ airs in full on SiriusXM’s The Tragically Hip Radio (ch. 757) and Iceberg (ch. 758).

“For three hours on a summer night, all of Canada paused to celebrate and pay tribute together through the power of music,” said CBC General Manager of Entertainment Sally Catto. The rebroadcast honours that collective experience and opens it up to a new generation hearing it for the first time.

The 29-track album is a deep and generous document. Spread across 6 sides of vinyl, it pulls performances from Kingston, Toronto, Calgary, Winnipeg, Hamilton, Edmonton, Ottawa, and London, covering the full geography of a band whose music has always been tied to this country’s landscape. The setlist reaches across the catalog, from “New Orleans Is Sinking” and “Bobcaygeon” to “Ahead By A Century” and “At The Hundredth Meridian.”

The Tragically Hip have 17 Juno Awards, over 12 million albums sold in Canada, and a humanitarian legacy that spans decades. This September, they’ll be inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame at Massey Hall in Toronto. ‘Live July 22 – August 20, 2016’ arrives at the right moment, a definitive archive release for a band whose catalog only grows in stature.

Pre-order is available now. The album releases August 21. The rebroadcast airs August 22. Communities across Canada are already planning events around the airdate. Follow along at CBCMusic.ca/thehip.

‘Live July 22 – August 20, 2016’ Tracklisting:

Side 1

  1. At Transformation – Winnipeg
  2. In View – Calgary
  3. In A World Possessed By The Human Mind – Kingston
  4. Family Band – Hamilton
  5. Lonely End Of The Rink – Hamilton

Side 2

  1. Something On – Toronto
  2. Locked In The Trunk Of A Car – Kingston
  3. Opiated – Winnipeg
  4. Nautical Disaster – Kingston
  5. New Orleans Is Sinking – Ottawa

Side 3

  1. Yer Not The Ocean – Calgary
  2. Gus: The Polar Bear From Central Park – London
  3. At The Hundredth Meridian – Toronto
  4. Daredevil – Toronto
  5. Bobcaygeon – Calgary

Side 4

  1. Lake Fever – Kingston
  2. Escape Is At Hand For The Travelin’ Man – Kingston
  3. Flamenco – Edmonton
  4. Putting Down – Kingston
  5. We Want To Be It – Toronto

Side 5

  1. 50 Mission Cap – Edmonton
  2. Little Bones – Kingston
  3. Greasy Jungle – Toronto
  4. The Last Of The Unplucked Gems – Winnipeg

Side 6

  1. Fiddler’s Green – Hamilton
  2. Machine – Kingston
  3. What Blue – Toronto
  4. It’s A Good Life If You Don’t Weaken – Toronto
  5. Ahead By A Century – Kingston

Lowell Summer Music Series Returns With Graham Nash, Iron & Wine, Margo Price, and More

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Thirty-six seasons in, the Lowell Summer Music Series keeps delivering. The beloved outdoor concert series returns to Boarding House Park in downtown Lowell from July 11 through mid-September with a stacked lineup that runs the full spectrum of American music.

Graham Nash, Iron & Wine, Margo Price, JJ Grey & Mofro, Christone “Kingfish” Ingram, Watchhouse, and Ripe are among the nationally touring acts confirmed for the 2026 season. That’s a murderers’ row of talent spread across a summer of live music in one of New England’s most distinctive outdoor venues.

The setting is half the story. Boarding House Park is a tree-lined, intimate space in the heart of downtown Lowell where fans spread out on blankets and beach chairs just steps from the stage. Series Director James Macdonald puts it plainly: “A summer night on the grass, under the stars, in one of the most unique and beautiful concert environments in Massachusetts.”

For the first time, the series is offering Season Pass Memberships, and the math is hard to argue with. A limited run of 100 passes covers all 12 concerts for the price of 6, working out to under $30 per show. “At a time when ticket prices continue to rise,” says Macdonald, “this gives fans the chance to experience an entire summer of music at one of the best concert values anywhere in New England.” Season Pass Memberships go on sale Friday, May 15, at 10:00 AM at LowellSummerMusic.org. Once they’re gone, they’re gone.

The 2026 season also marks something extra. Lowell is celebrating its bicentennial, and the series is marking the occasion with a free concert on July 12. The Rat Pack Show brings Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, and Sammy Davis Jr. back to life in a full-on 1960s tribute. Doors open at 5:30 PM, showtime at 6:30 PM.

September brings the 45th Annual Banjo and Fiddle Contest, a free all-day event on September 12 running from 10:00 AM to 6:00 PM. Workshops, jam sessions, and competition make it a standout day for traditional music lovers. Registration is open now at LowellSummerMusic.org.

The series also continues its Free Fun for Kids program through July and August, offering family-friendly performances, free lunches from Lowell Public Schools, free books, creative activities, and complimentary trolley rides from the National Park Service. The program serves thousands of children and families every summer at no cost.

The Lowell Summer Music Series is produced by the Lowell Festival Foundation, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit running entirely on ticket sales, sponsorships, grants, and community support. No taxpayer funding. Just great music in a great park.

Tickets for most shows are on sale now at LowellSummerMusic.org. Boarding House Park is located at 40 French St, Lowell, MA.

2026 Season Lineup:

July 11: Back to the 80’s with Jessie’s Girl

July 12: The Rat Pack Show (Free Bicentennial Celebration)

July 17: The Fab Faux

August 2: JJ Grey & Mofro

August 7: Iron & Wine

August 8: Christone “Kingfish” Ingram

August 9: Ripe

August 14: Watchhouse

August 15: Pink Talking Fish

August 20: The Record Company Featuring the Charlie Musselwhite Duo

August 21: Lotus Land

September 4: Margo Price

September 12: 45th Annual Banjo & Fiddle Contest

September 13: Graham Nash

David Byrne’s ‘American Utopia’ Returns to Cinemas for One Night Only in 4K This August

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Spike Lee’s acclaimed concert film of David Byrne’s ‘American Utopia’ returns to cinemas on August 5 for a single night, newly restored in 4K, marking 5 years since it first premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival. Tickets go on sale June 18 here.

Directed by Lee using 11 camera operators, the film captures Byrne’s Broadway production of the same name, which ran at New York’s Hudson Theatre from October 2019 to February 2020. Choreographed by Annie-B Parson, the show featured Byrne and an 11-person ensemble performing barefoot in sharp grey suits, with no amps or microphones visible on stage, drawing from both his solo catalog and Talking Heads classics including “Once in a Lifetime” and “Burning Down the House.”

The production also featured a performance of Janelle Monáe’s “Hell You Talmbout,” with the ensemble calling out the names of Black Americans killed through racial violence and police brutality, giving the show a political weight that matched its theatrical ambition.

NME gave the film 5 stars, calling it “New York’s finest teaming up for a greatest hits extravaganza that doubles as one of 2020’s best films.” The tour that preceded the Broadway run earned the same outlet’s verdict of “the most ambitious and impressive live show of all time,” a quote Byrne subsequently used as the title of a live EP.

Journey Add 40 Dates to the Final Frontier Tour, Including Toronto and Detroit This Fall

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Journey’s Final Frontier Tour just got significantly larger. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame legends have added 40 fall North American dates to their ongoing farewell run, bringing the total to 100 shows on the continent in 2026 alone. The new leg opens September 12 at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles and closes November 28 at Chase Center in San Francisco, the band’s hometown.

Canadian dates include Toronto’s Scotiabank Arena on November 4 and Detroit’s Little Caesars Arena on November 2, with the fall run also hitting Seattle, Chicago, Atlanta, Philadelphia, Boston, Dallas, and dozens more cities in between.

The current leg of the tour, which launched February 28 in Hershey, Pennsylvania, has been drawing packed arenas night after night. The setlists have gone deep, mixing expected hits with genuine rarities including “La Raza del Sol” for the first time in nearly a decade, “Of a Lifetime” from their 1975 debut, and “Lovin’ You is Easy” performed live for the first time since 1982.

Founder Neal Schon spoke to the energy the tour has generated. “Seeing these crowds sing these songs with us after all these years has been powerful,” he said. “We’re excited to bring The Final Frontier Tour to even more cities this fall.” Jonathan Cain, who has confirmed he’ll step away from the band once the farewell run concludes in 2027, added that the songs “continue to connect with people in such a meaningful way.” Arnel Pineda called every night “a celebration.”

The current lineup features Schon on lead guitar, Cain on keyboards and guitar, Pineda on lead vocals, Deen Castronovo on drums, Jason Derlatka on keyboards, and Todd Jensen on bass.

Citi presale begins Wednesday May 13 at 10 am local. Artist presale starts the same day at noon. General on-sale is Friday May 15 at 10 am local via Ticketmaster.

Journey 2026 Tour Dates:

May 15 – Tampa, FL @ Benchmark International Arena

May 16 – Jacksonville, FL @ VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena

May 18 – Columbia, SC @ Colonial Life Arena

May 20 – Charlotte, NC @ Spectrum Center

May 21 – Greensboro, NC @ First Horizon Coliseum

May 23 – Atlantic City, NJ @ Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall

May 27 – State College, PA @ Bryce Jordan Center

May 28 – Charlottesville, VA @ John Paul Jones Arena

May 30 – Knoxville, TN @ Food City Center

May 31 – Savannah, GA @ Enmarket Arena

Jun 3 – Hampton, VA @ Hampton Coliseum

Jun 4 – Roanoke, VA @ Berglund Center Coliseum

Jun 6 – Worcester, MA @ DCU Center

Jun 7 – Manchester, NH @ SNHU Arena

Jun 10 – Buffalo, NY @ KeyBank Center

Jun 11 – Allentown, PA @ PPL Center

Jun 13 – Cincinnati, OH @ Heritage Bank Center

Jun 14 – Grand Rapids, MI @ Van Andel Arena

Jun 17 – Evansville, IN @ Ford Center

Jun 18 – Fort Wayne, IN @ Allen County War Memorial Coliseum

Jun 20 – Champaign, IL @ State Farm Center

Jun 21 – Green Bay, WI @ Resch Center

Jun 24 – Moline, IL @ Vibrant Arena at the MARK

Jun 25 – Springfield, MO @ Great Southern Bank Arena

Jun 27 – Tupelo, MS @ Cadence Bank Arena

Jun 28 – Lafayette, LA @ CAJUNDOME

Jul 1 – Corpus Christi, TX @ Hilliard Center Arena

Jul 2 – Laredo, TX @ Sames Auto Arena

Jul 6 – Lincoln, NE @ Pinnacle Bank Arena

Jul 7 – Des Moines, IA @ Casey’s Center

Sep 12 – Los Angeles, CA @ Crypto.com Arena

Sep 14 – San Diego, CA @ Pechanga Arena San Diego

Sep 15 – Phoenix, AZ @ Mortgage Matchup Center

Sep 17 – Stockton, CA @ Adventist Health Arena

Sep 19 – Portland, OR @ Veterans Memorial Coliseum

Sep 21 – Seattle, WA @ Climate Pledge Arena

Sep 24 – Edmonton, AB @ Rogers Place

Sep 26 – Calgary, AB @ Scotiabank Saddledome

Sep 27 – Saskatoon, SK @ SaskTel Centre

Sep 29 – Winnipeg, MB @ Canada Life Centre

Oct 2 – Grand Forks, ND @ Alerus Center

Oct 4 – St. Paul, MN @ Grand Casino Arena

Oct 5 – Chicago, IL @ United Center

Oct 8 – Tulsa, OK @ BOK Center

Oct 10 – San Antonio, TX @ Frost Bank Center

Oct 12 – Biloxi, MS @ Mississippi Coast Coliseum

Oct 13 – Birmingham, AL @ Legacy Arena at the BJCC

Oct 16 – Sunrise, FL @ Amerant Bank Arena

Oct 17 – Orlando, FL @ Kia Center

Oct 19 – Atlanta, GA @ State Farm Arena

Oct 21 – Nashville, TN @ Bridgestone Arena

Oct 22 – Louisville, KY @ KFC Yum! Center

Oct 24 – Baltimore, MD @ CFG Bank Arena

Oct 25 – Newark, NJ @ Prudential Center

Oct 28 – Philadelphia, PA @ Xfinity Mobile Arena

Oct 29 – Providence, RI @ Amica Mutual Pavilion

Nov 2 – Detroit, MI @ Little Caesars Arena

Nov 4 – Toronto, ON @ Scotiabank Arena

Nov 6 – Wilkes-Barre, PA @ Mohegan Arena at Casey Plaza

Nov 7 – Uniondale, NY @ Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum

Nov 10 – Boston, MA @ TD Garden

Nov 12 – Cleveland, OH @ Rocket Arena

Nov 14 – Greenville, SC @ Bon Secours Wellness Arena

Nov 16 – St. Louis, MO @ Enterprise Center

Nov 18 – Houston, TX @ Toyota Center

Nov 20 – Dallas, TX @ American Airlines Center

Nov 22 – Denver, CO @ Ball Arena

Nov 24 – Anaheim, CA @ Honda Center

Nov 27 – Las Vegas, NV @ MGM Grand Garden Arena

Nov 28 – San Francisco, CA @ Chase Center

Amazon Prime Video Stacks Its Slate With Major Renewals, New Orders, and a Holiday Schwarzenegger Heist at Its Annual Upfront

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Amazon Prime Video used its annual US Upfront presentation to roll out one of its most ambitious slates in recent memory, confirming major renewals, new series orders, and premiere dates across drama, comedy, reality, and film. The Canadian Upfront follows on May 27 in Toronto.

The biggest renewal news belongs to Reacher, which has been picked up for a fifth season before its fourth has even premiered. Season 3 drew 54.6 million global viewers in its first 19 days, making it the most-watched season on the service since Fallout Season 1 over the same window. Fallout itself continues its dominance: Seasons 1 and 2 have now surpassed 100 million viewers worldwide, with Aaron Paul joining the cast for Season 3, which begins filming this summer.

The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power locks in a November 11, 2026 premiere date for Season 3. The series has attracted more than 185 million viewers worldwide and remains one of Amazon’s strongest drivers for new Prime membership sign-ups. The Terminal List Season 2, all 8 episodes, arrives October 21, 2026, with Chris Pratt and Antoine Fuqua executive producing a globe-trotting espionage thriller based on Jack Carr’s novel True Believer.

On the new series front, Fourth Wing, based on Rebecca Yarros’ number 1 New York Times bestselling novel, has been ordered to series with Meredith Averill as showrunner and Lisa Joy directing the pilot. Michael B. Jordan’s Outlier Society is among the executive producers. Rose Hill, based on Elsie Silver’s romance novels, also got a series order with Marc Webb directing the pilot.

Brett Goldstein stars in and co-showruns Escorted, an 8-episode half-hour comedy about a divorced Manhattan dad who accidentally becomes a male escort. Sex Criminals, starring Imogen Poots and John Reynolds, taps Nia DaCosta to direct the pilot, with Kumail Nanjiani and Emily V. Gordon among the co-creators. Jury Duty has been renewed for a third season following the success of its second instalment, Company Retreat.

Octavia Spencer and Hannah Waddingham lead Ride or Die, an action comedy about best friends, one of whom turns out to be an international assassin. All 8 episodes premiere globally July 15. Reality Retreat, a high-stakes wellness retreat series featuring Kenya Moore, Christine Quinn, Brittany Cartwright, Tamar Braxton, Kaitlyn Bristowe, Jenn Tran, the Chrisleys, and Hilaria Baldwin, arrives in 2027.

Closing out the film announcements, Arnold Schwarzenegger and Alan Ritchson lead The Man with the Bag, a holiday heist comedy directed by Adam Shankman in which a thief is recruited by Santa to recover his stolen magic bag. Also starring Awkwafina, Ken Jeong, Jane Krakowski, and Liza Koshy, it premieres December 2, 2026.

On the sports side, Thursday Night Football on Prime enters its fifth year of exclusive coverage, opening September 17 with the Detroit Lions vs. Buffalo Bills at Highmark Stadium in Orchard Park, the NFL’s newest state-of-the-art venue.